Would
you be interested in a brand-new, fully warranted, five-door crossover
SUV built by a major, name-brand automaker that gave you 50-plus
MPG with a gas (not diesel or hybrid) engine, that has a top speed
around 125 mph, is capable of getting to 60 in 12 seconds (about the
same as a Prius hybrid) that stickered for less than $5,000?

Yeah, me too.

It’s called the Renault Kwid (see here) and it looks kinda-sorta like a Nissan Juke or Kia Soul and is about the same size as those units.

It isn’t a latter-day Yugo either.

The Kwid comes standard with AC, power windows and a
digital dashboard, a seven-inch LCD display in the center stack and most
of the apps you’d find in a new Soul or Juke.

It also has a modern, fuel-injected engine and a five-speed overdrive transmission.

The difference is the Kwid costs about a third what a new
Juke or Soul would cost you to buy: Its base price is just $4,700 (not
counting taxes and tags).

Too bad we can’t buy one.

Not because such a vehicle isn’t available.

It’s just not available here.

Neither are other such cars, like the Suzuki Alto 800 (53
MPG and a base price of $3,870; $5,755 loaded) and the Hyundai Eon (50
MPG and $4,856 to start; $6,636 loaded).

Because Uncle.

His “safety” mandates make these vehicles illegal for sale
in the United (at gunpoint) States. Even though the Kwid has an air bag
– the main fetish item of America’s gone-off-the-deep-end Safety Cult.

It just doesn’t have enough of them.

Only one (for the driver) rather than the six or more that
are now necessary in the U.S. to comply with Uncle’s nail-biting,
neurotic – and very expensive – “safety” mandates. It also couldn’t
pass current federal bumper impact or roof crush standards –
notwithstanding that the Kwid is much more crashworthy than, say, a
classic ’70s-era VW Beetle or (probably) even a Chrysler K-car from the
1980s.

“Safety” is relative.

The federal government says a SmartCar is “safe” because
it meets the requirements for its class (subcompact). But see what
happens when it gets T-boned by a ’70 Eldorado without a single air bag
that would never pass the “safety” tests required of the not-so-smart
car.

The Kwid is probably “safer” – as far as its ability to
protect occupants in the event of a crash – than the federally approved
SmartCar.

It doesn’t matter.

Nor the fact that the Kwid’s emissions are also a fraction
of those produced by cars that were legal for sale in this country as
recently as the 1990s. Unfortunately – for us – the Kwid doesn’t meet current
federal standards, which ceased being reasonable back in the ’90s.
Current federal standards pursue the remaining 1-3 percent of a new
car’s exhaust emissions not yet “controlled” with an Inspector
Javert-like mania – irrespective of cost and even when achieving
compliance results in more emissions, grand scheme of things.

It doesn’t matter that the Kwid’s less-than-one-liter
three cylinder engine produces a smaller total volume of exhaust –
because it burns less fuel – which means that on the whole, its
emissions output is lower than U.S.-legal cars with much larger
(1.8-2.5 liter four cylinder, typically) engines that burn much more
fuel overall and so produce a greater volume of exhaust gas.

And, therefore, more emissions.

Uncle knows all this, probably.

It does not – as the saying goes – take a rocket
scientist. If idle my ’76 Trans-Am for five minutes, then turn it off –
it produces fewer emissions than a Prius that’s run for an hour.

The problem isn’t the Kwid’s emissions – or its “safety.”

It is both reasonably clean and safe – as well being
extremely fuel efficient (surpassing by at least 10 MPG the highest
numbers achieved by any non-hybrid car currently available for sale in
the United States).

It is that the Kwid is inexpensive – and that is a dagger aimed at the heart of the debt-financed Jenga castle that is the U.S. economy.

If this car were available here, people would once again
be able to stroke a check for a brand-new car. No monthly payment for
the next six years. They’d have money in the bank – rather be in hock to
bankers.

The Kwid costs less than the options packages on many new cars. The Hyundai Eon costs even less.

The competitive pressure that the availability of such
cars would put on the established automakers would be tremendous. They’d
have to lower the cost of their cars, too, to remain in the game.
People would realize that a decent new car, with more luxury amenities
than most luxury cars had 20 years ago, need not cost $20,000 or even
$15,000 – or even $10,000.

And they’d know exactly how much “safety” and
“emissions” mandates emanating out of the various orifices in Washington
have been costing them.

Most people are blind to it because these costs are very
astutely folded into the cost of the car. There is no line-item for air
bags, or the now-mandatory back-up cameras. Let alone the enormous costs
imposed on consumers via the government’s various impact/rollover
resistance standards.

When air bags were first offered as optional
equipment back in the ’70s, the cost of the air bags was right there on
the window sticker. Most people decided – reasonably – that the expense
(at the time, back in the early ’70s, about $800 for just the one,
driver’s side air bag) was simply not worth it.

Then government mandated the bags and this choice was taken away.

And so was the price tag.

Now – today – almost every new car has at least six air bags. Not only do the cars cost thousands more as a result, they also cost thousands more to fix (and insure).

They are heavier – and much less fuel efficient – than
they might otherwise be. The Kwid and Eon and the Suzuki Alto are
four-wheeled/real-deal proof of this. They show us what we could
have – were it not for the effrontery (and cupidity) of the government
(and the car cartels) who now work together to shear us like sheep,
while telling us it’s all for our own good, to keep us “safe.”